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Environmental Studies Midterm Review- Trashketball Part 2. The gradual process of change and replacement of the types of species in a community is called _____. Pollution succession pioneer species climax community.
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The gradual process of change and replacement of the types of species in a community is called _____. • Pollution • succession • pioneer species • climax community
Succession that occurs on a surface where no ecosystem existed is called _____ succession. • Secondary • fire • pond • primary
Organisms that can live on a surface where no organisms have ever lived are called _____. • Aliens • climax species • pioneer species • consumer species
When primary succession occurs, the first change in the ecosystem is the formation of _____. • Autotrophs • water • dirt • air
Which of the following is correctly arranged from the lowest trophic level to the highest? • Bacteria, frog, eagle, mushroom • Algae, deer, wolf, hawk • grass, mouse, snake, eagle • grass, bass, minnow, snake
Communities of bacteria have been found thousands of feet underwater. Which of the following statements is a good conclusion about the bacteria? • Somehow they are conducting photosynthesis • They are living on borrowed time • they were somehow introduced by humans • they use an energy source other than sunlight
Which of the following pairs of organisms probably belong to the same trophic level? • Humans/ bears • bears/ deer • humans/ cows • both (a) and (c)
Energy lost between trophic levels _____. • Can be captured only by parasitic organisms • Cools the surrounding environment • is used in the course of normal living • evaporates in the atmosphere
Which biome contains the most species? • chaparral • taiga • tundra • tropical rain forest
The tundra is most suitable to a vertebrate that _____. • requires nesting sites in tall trees • has a green outer skin for camouflage • is cold-blooded • can migrate hundreds of kilometers each summer
A biome that has a large amount of rainfall, high temperature, and poor soil is a _____. • temperate woodland • temperate rain forest • tropical rain forest • savanna
The two main factors that determine where organisms live are __________. • soil type/ precipitation • temperature/ precipitation • altitude/ precipitation • temperature/ latitude
What do we call the distance north or south of the equator and is measured in degrees? • altitude • longitude • latitude • space
The height above sea level is called _____. • Altitude • Longitude • latitude • space
An adaptation used by trees in a tropical rain forest is to have _____. • thorns • small leaves • buttresses • deep roots
Most of the nutrients in a tropical rain forest are located in the _____. • air • soil • plants • water
Which biome has the greatest diversity? • taiga • temperate rain forest • chaparral • tropical rain forest
Temperate rain forests have more nutrients in the soil than tropical rain forests because ________. • more sunlight • less sunlight • higher temperatures • lower temperatures
Logging is a big threat to temperate rain forests. It creates the second big threat which is _____. • over fishing • slash and burn farming • air pollution • silting of water sources
A typical tree in the taiga is shaped ____________. • with a large shade area • pointed with wax coated needles • round with thorns • wide at the top
The biggest threat to the taiga is _____. • over fishing • oil exploration • farming • ecotourism
Most grasslands require ______ to fertilize the soil. • floods • fire • wind storms • big animal scat
The animals that inhabit a savanna are usually ____________________. • many species with few of each species • many species with many of each species • few species with many individuals from the species • few species with few if each species
Many of the smaller grassland animals have adapted to living in _____. • trees • scrubs with thorns • burrows • rivers
A major threat to grasslands is ____________. • oil exploration • over fishing • floods • farming
A property of water is buoyancy which means _____. • it holds water together • the push of water on a submerged object • water can absorb a lot of heat • water has two side that are oppositely charged
The area near the shore at the top of the water that receives sunlight and includes plants is called the _____ zone. • Lentic • Littoral • Benthic • Lotic
One of the general types of freshwater ecosystems includes flowing bodies of water and they are called _____ zones. • Lentic • Littoral • Benthic • Lotic
The bottom of the lake is called the _____ zone. • Lentic • Littoral • Benthic • Lotic
The area in between the two main zones where the temperature decrease rapidly is called a(n) _____. • thermocline • hypolimnion • epilimnion • profundal
Lakes can be identified by their age. Newly formed lakes with deep steep banks and a low primary production are called _____ lakes. • Mesotrophic • Oligotrophic • Grande • Eutrophic
Water that does not sink into the soil is called _____. • watershed • surface water • puddles • runoff
Surface water that ends up running into a stream is called _____. • watershed • surface water • puddles • runoff
The land area that contributes runoff sediment and dissolved substances to a stream is called a(n) _____. • watershed • surface water • puddles • runoff
Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of the benthic zone? • low oxygen • dark • cold • high diversity
Mangrove swamps or forests are found in _______ climates. • tropical • temperate • sub temperate • sub arctic
Salt marshes are found in _____ climates. • tropical • temperate • sub temperate • sub arctic
Mangrove seeds are unique because they ____ while still on the tree. • grow trunks • have leaves • germinate • grow fruit
SC salt marshes consist mainly of _____ plants. • water oaks • mangrove • palmetto • Spartinaalterniflora
The part of the ocean that forms a shallow sea bed surrounding a continent is called the _____. • continental shelf • intertidal zone • coral reef zone • abyssal zone
That part of the coast that is submerged at high tide and exposed at low tide is called the _____. • continental shelf • intertidal zone • coral reef zone • abyssal zone
The bottom of the ocean is called the _____. • continental shelf • intertidal zone • coral reef zone • abyssal zone
The number of individuals of the same species that live in a given area is called a _____. • niche • population • symbiosis • habitat
The unique position occupied by a species in an ecosystem or the species job is called a _____. • carrying capacity • habitat • growth rate • niche
When the number of births is the same as the number of deaths in a population, this is called _____. • exponential growth • zero population growth • growth rate • carrying capacity
The relationship between two species in which both try to use the same resource is called ______. • predation • competition • parasitism • symbiosis
A relationship between two species in which one species, benefits and the other species is harmed but not killed is called _____ • predation • competition • parasitism • symbiosis
The ____ is the largest population that an environment can carry support at one time. • carrying capacity • exponential growth • zero population growth • reproductive potential
The increase in size of a population over a period of time is called the _____. • carrying capacity • exponential growth • zero population growth • reproductive potential